09-05-2009, 19:24
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#1
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Asset
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Marietta GA
Posts: 26
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riggers at tolz..... late 60's
late 60's, anyone ever see where the parachutes were packed? Remember anything of interest there??? you know, pictures ?
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" I'm all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let's start with typewriters. " Frank Lloyd Wright ... 1868-1959..NRA.life...12b4s...
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jon1481 is offline
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09-24-2009, 17:54
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#2
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Asset
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Marietta GA
Posts: 26
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I must be the last soldier of my time
so sad, ok, I will share what I saw. Pinups everywhere, centerfolds from Playboy..entire walls and ceiling covered... every inch......a SF papering!!! It was one of the wonders of Tolz......great people our riggers. The best, I might say.
__________________
" I'm all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let's start with typewriters. " Frank Lloyd Wright ... 1868-1959..NRA.life...12b4s...
Last edited by jon1481; 09-24-2009 at 18:07.
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jon1481 is offline
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11-18-2009, 13:02
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#3
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Asset
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Maryland
Posts: 1
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rigging shed
I responding on behalf of my father, who was a rigger stationed at tolz during the late 60s. He worked in the rigging shed in 68 and 69. Where you there during the same period?
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farmallih is offline
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11-18-2009, 13:27
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#4
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Castle Rock, CO
Posts: 2,531
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The rigger shed was located about 150' or so east of the Quad...it shared a parking lot on the south side with the commissary...I think TMP was just east of the rigger shed...long building...riggers on the main floor, HALO team (ODA 3/113) in the loft, mountain team (ODA 5/123) in the basement...
When I was there, the packing area was pretty standard...you have to remember that during that time Bonnie and Connie in PM Magazine went from being scantily clad to wearing casual clothes, the pin-up girl on the inside back cover of Soldiers Magazine went away and anything adorning the walls of a barracks room had to be inside a picture frame...guys were allowed to tape centerfolds inside their lockers, but that was about it...no pin-ups were permitted in work areas...as I recall, we had one or two female riggers when I was in Toelz...
A guy could still get lunch and a couple of brews at the Labor Service canteens in the south parking lot, though...
The era you are referring began to disappear when women started attending jump school in 1974...
__________________
""A man must know his destiny. if he does not recognize it, then he is lost. By this I mean, once, twice, or at the very most, three times, fate will reach out and tap a man on the shoulder. if he has the imagination, he will turn around and fate will point out to him what fork in the road he should take, if he has the guts, he will take it.""- GEN George S. Patton
Last edited by lksteve; 11-18-2009 at 13:33.
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lksteve is offline
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11-18-2009, 16:33
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#5
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Clarksville, TN
Posts: 1,159
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Nothing inside the shed as of 1981 - probably too damn PC by then.
So as not to hijack this thread, but while on the subject, go to my post #193. Does anybody recognize themselves as jumpmaster and SF jumpers from a Chinook jump in January 1981? Here's the page:
http://www.professionalsoldiers.com/...t=tolz&page=10
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CSB is offline
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11-22-2009, 14:31
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#6
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Atlantic Ocean
Posts: 136
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Rigger shed and environs
lksteve,
I was on 5 from 1/76 thru 12/78 and we were indeed in the basement under the riggers. I don't recall any pinup collection, tho I was in the rigging area only occasionally (and I'm sure such things would have been noticed by an impressionable youth such as myself).
At that time, the Commissary was indeed immediately south, tho there was a divider in the parking lot. The "craft shop" auto shop was immediately North, the long building to the E was also used by the auto shop/AFEES parts store, etc. TMP was much further South, out past the Rod & Bottle.
Hartley
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Hartley is offline
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11-22-2009, 19:54
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#7
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Quiet Professional (RIP)
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Carriere,Ms.
Posts: 6,922
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Quote:
Originally Posted by farmallih
I responding on behalf of my father, who was a rigger stationed at tolz during the late 60s. He worked in the rigging shed in 68 and 69. Where you there during the same period?
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Could use more on your public profile...... Doesn't anyone read the stickies anymore ?
Big Teddy
__________________
I believe that SF is a 'calling' - not too different from the calling missionaries I know received. I knew instantly that it was for me, and that I would do all I could to achieve it. Most others I know in SF experienced something similar. If, as you say, you HAVE searched and read, and you do not KNOW if this is the path for you --- it is not....
Zonie Diver
SF is a calling and it requires commitment and dedication that the uninitiated will never understand......
Jack Moroney
SFA M-2527, Chapter XXXVII
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greenberetTFS is offline
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11-26-2009, 14:36
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#8
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: 11 miles from Dove Creek, Colorady
Posts: 3,924
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We had riggers? I thought the chute fairies brought them.
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"...But if it be a sin to covet honour,
I am the most offending soul alive."
Shakespeare - Henry V
Lazy Bob Ranch
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Utah Bob is offline
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11-26-2009, 17:33
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#9
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Georgetown, SC
Posts: 4,204
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We always feared the rigger named "Donald Duck"!
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"I took a different route from most and came into Special Forces..." - Col. Nick Rowe
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ZonieDiver is offline
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11-26-2009, 17:39
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#10
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Sneaking back and forth across the Border
Posts: 6,628
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ZonieDiver
We always feared the rigger named "Donald Duck"!
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Do not forget about Micky Mouse He packed A lot of chutes..
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SF_BHT is offline
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11-26-2009, 23:25
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#11
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Castle Rock, CO
Posts: 2,531
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CSB
Nothing inside the shed as of 1981 - probably too damn PC by then.
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I think it had more to do with Jack Harrison than it did anything PC...
Quote:
Originally Posted by CSB
So as not to hijack this thread, but while on the subject, go to my post #193. Does anybody recognize themselves as jumpmaster and SF jumpers from a Chinook jump in January 1981?
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Must have been a Det Europe jump...January of 1981, the battalion was either on the Brauneck skiing or on the Battalion Winter Warfare training exercise...we came back in a day or so early so we could watch the Super Bowl...I've looked at the pics and I don't recognize anyone, so it could have been PCT as well...to the best of my recollection, we had three or four 'Hook jumps in my 3+ years in Toelz...
__________________
""A man must know his destiny. if he does not recognize it, then he is lost. By this I mean, once, twice, or at the very most, three times, fate will reach out and tap a man on the shoulder. if he has the imagination, he will turn around and fate will point out to him what fork in the road he should take, if he has the guts, he will take it.""- GEN George S. Patton
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lksteve is offline
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11-27-2009, 13:39
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#12
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Quiet Professional (RIP)
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Carriere,Ms.
Posts: 6,922
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Lenny Fronta,was a rigger at Tolz from 1959 until ? He went to the 10th with several of us guys after they deactivated the 11th and we all re-up for Special Forces in Dec 1958............I wasn't a rigger,but he was and they were glad to get him.....Any of you guys remember him? CHicago boy,good old Polish lad..........I'm not sure when he left.....
Big Teddy
__________________
I believe that SF is a 'calling' - not too different from the calling missionaries I know received. I knew instantly that it was for me, and that I would do all I could to achieve it. Most others I know in SF experienced something similar. If, as you say, you HAVE searched and read, and you do not KNOW if this is the path for you --- it is not....
Zonie Diver
SF is a calling and it requires commitment and dedication that the uninitiated will never understand......
Jack Moroney
SFA M-2527, Chapter XXXVII
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greenberetTFS is offline
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12-21-2010, 14:55
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#13
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Asset
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Spokane, WA
Posts: 34
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Riggers at Flint
Rick Kelbaugh was a rigger there ('67-68 I believe). He later joined LAPD, was in the SLA shootout ('74), survived a near fatal Huey crash and became a successful screenwriter after retirement.
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We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; for he today that sheds his blood with me shall be my brother...Henry V
De Oppresso Liber
Who dares wins
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Bad Tolz is offline
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06-27-2011, 10:27
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#14
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Asset
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Portland, Oregon
Posts: 1
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Rigger 1964-66
I was in the 10th SFG at Toelz Rigger section for two years. We did have pinups as that era was not interested in Political Correctness. We also had a keg of beer from the monastery every Friday after work in the break room.
Rigging was a hard job, look at the MOS qualifications. We worked to inspect every piece of equipment after each jump, repack it then issue it for the next jump. Then we were required to be at the marshaling area and on the DZ for DZSO duties. We also went on all training missions including TDYout of country.
Section chief was CWO Christman and Jerry Sage was Group CO, SMJ Piolette was Group SMJ. Line outfits were in Prinz Heinrich Kaserne.
Rigger names that I remember-McCoy,Charlie Mackay, Ron Andrieu, Miller (Moose), James Rogers,Jim Morris, Carl Lavender, Bob Lohman, Robert Lass, Dave Pennell, Dean Baker,Ken Walton, Gordon Avery, Baja, Jerry Brooks, Cooper, Bob Floden and Don Cain.
The Rigger shed was the old Panzer tank maintenance shop during the 3rd Reich when Flint Kaserne was the Junkerschule. It was located next to the base commissary.
The tunnel system under the Kaserne was one of my slightly off-limits activities, I loved to explore them.
portland.ken@gmail.com
I have returned there more than twenty-five tomes in the past 45 years.
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Rigger22 is offline
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08-08-2011, 20:07
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#15
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Asset
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Marietta GA
Posts: 26
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memory
Thanks God, someone besides me saw pinups! Thought I had lost my mind at the wine house.
__________________
" I'm all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Let's start with typewriters. " Frank Lloyd Wright ... 1868-1959..NRA.life...12b4s...
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jon1481 is offline
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